OMG!

Feb. 7th, 2008 07:30 am
hils: (Geek Doctor by me)
[personal profile] hils
Thanks to [livejournal.com profile] patterns_rhyme I have the opportunity to see David Tennant doing Shakespeare in Stratford Upon Avon

You hear that sound? That would be me exploding from squee *g*

Seriously, I have wanted to visit Stratford Upon Avon since I was about 15 and now I finally get to go and see David too!

GLEE!!!

Date: 2008-02-07 09:17 pm (UTC)
spikewriter: (Geek)
From: [personal profile] spikewriter
I won't mug you. Maybe. :)

If you're there more than one night and have the chance to get even cheap seats for Love's, I'd do go for it. It's a play that's not done very often, so this may be a rare chance to actually see it (thought DT doing Berowne is certainly a bonus).

Stewart is marvelous on stage; I have been lucky enough to see him several times -- mostly in his rendition of "A Christmas Carol", which he started doing out here because he couldn't go home for Christmas due to the impending writer's strike (the last one, not the current one).

I'm hoping the RSC will decide to make some money and film the production for release here in the states. They're apparently doing that with Ian McKellum's King Lear with Sylvester McCoy as the fool, and I'm hunting Amazon for the pre-order for that one.

Btw, I've got Tennant's Romeo essay in PDF form if you're interested.

Date: 2008-02-07 10:51 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hils.livejournal.com
I'm going to be there for 3 nights but I probably won't go and see the play. I can't afford to spend more. My hotel is already insanely expensive. LOL

What essay is this?

Date: 2008-02-07 11:18 pm (UTC)
spikewriter: (Default)
From: [personal profile] spikewriter
There's a series of books entitled Players of Shakespeare which is essays by actors who've done various parts for the RSC. You've Derek Jacobi on Macbeth, Patrick Stewart on playing Shylock, Nigel Hawthorne on Lear, etc. David Tennant's done two -- the first on playing Touchstone in As You Like It in 1996 (which appears to have been something of an experiment in terror for him because it wasn't the part he auditioned for, he didn't think he was funny enough to pull it off and it looked like he was right for a while) and the second on playing Romeo in 2000.

If you like digging into the how and why of the choices actors make about characters, I highly recommend the series. This is Shakespeare as theatre, not literature, how it breathes and moves and the choices an individual actor makes in interpreting it. I've done stage work and I've done Shakespeare in a professional capacity. In fact, I played Juliet when I was really way too young. Both Romeo and Juliet are difficult parts to play because the characters are terribly young (Juliet's not yet fourteen according to the script; I was almost thirteen) but they demand a certain maturity which is impossible to find in actors of the correct age.

I've got a copy of the Romeo essay in PDF form and it's an interesting look at the way his mind digs into a character. It isn't the greatest writing in the world (there are a few places the grammar seems a bit awkward), but if you like that sort of stuff, it's a fascinating read. I've got the first two volumes of the series and getting my hands on this reminded me I really need to get the rest. Alas, they are not inexpensive over here.

Date: 2008-02-07 11:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hils.livejournal.com
OOH! I'd love to read it if you don't mind sending it

Date: 2008-02-07 11:28 pm (UTC)
spikewriter: (Default)
From: [personal profile] spikewriter
I'll drop it in the mail when I get home in a couple of hours. Let me know what you think.

Date: 2008-02-07 11:31 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hils.livejournal.com
I'm heading off to bed now but it'll give me something to read at work tomorrow *g*

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